So my cousin was here and saw a grocery receipt on the table and asked if I was using it and if he could take a picture of it, I was like what, why?

So, there is this app that pays you some cents for receipt pictures and supposedly it pays you if it finds items that have cashback… shit sounds sketchy as fuck, I saw that on their app they sell credit cards and you can invest in some crap, but what I really found disturbing is this thing about them paying you to send them all your receipts… what the fuck are they doing with that info lol

Crazy stuff, but I’m completely out of touch with cellphone things, is this crap normal??? I was quite shocked by it, and checking the company online, Méliuz, I just see stuff about it buying bitcoin.

  • umbrellacloud@leminal.space
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    1 hour ago

    There are some ‘legit’ apps that do this, for the purpose of targeting you with ads. Hard to believe, but some people want to be specifically catered to with ads. There are also a lot of poor people who sign up to these things to make a few extra dollars and get free samples from review sites, which is kind of in the same category of website/app. For example I knew someone who got paid to review Chromebooks or Netbooks or something from a Chinese manufacturer. There are survey sites and apps too, and other data collection apps which pay users small amounts of money for small amounts of data.

    However what your cousin was doing sounds even more sketchy than that. It sounds like the sort of thing that will somehow turn out to be crime.

  • Brickfrog@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 hours ago

    The Google Rewards Opinion app does this, scan receipts or answer random questions for Google Play cash. I assume they do it for market research to figure out better advertising (Google is in the advertising business after all).

    Never heard of other apps doing that but I’m sure it’s the same idea, other apps must use or sell that data to ad brokers.

  • artyom@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    what the fuck are they doing with that info lol

    Collecting it and either selling it to databrokers or using it directly to target you with ads.

  • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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    1 day ago

    Congratulations, you’re in a new database.

    I imagine it has a unique code (last digits of CC#) location and timestamp, and valuable purchase information advertisers are salivating over to profile you; and yes, I mean you, not your cousin. The only cash your cousin will see is just enough scraps to trigger feel-good responses so this can happen again.

    Edit: if the receipt is indeed yours…

    • ErenOnizuka@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      How would they be able to know that OP was the one making the purchases and not the cousin?

      The cousin is the one uploading the picture.

      • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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        6 hours ago

        Many stores have installed Bluetooth beacon tracking that will monitor all customers cell phones (or other Bluetooth devices) precise location throughout the store.

        The items on the receipt can work as a “checksum” for a specific pattern around that time of day.

        Self checkouts also have cameras that can identify biometrics, repeat shoppers, and other data points for a profile. But it’s not known is the customer used one of those kiosks.

        • ErenOnizuka@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 hours ago

          Ehh?? How would that app know about the data the store potentially collects?

          Many stores have installed Bluetooth beacon tracking that will monitor all customers cell phones

          What? No one is doing that. Why would they? What if you have bluetooth disabled all the time like me because you don’t have any Bluetooth accessories, or to save power, or because Bluetooth is insecure.

          Self checkouts also have cameras that can identify biometrics

          ??? The camera is just to check on the customers if they are scanning everything properly and not stealing. A human is reviewing the footage. A human is going to confront you if they detect you not scanning something.

          They have absolutely no reason to store the video footage or even sell that to anyone. Besides, no one would buy that. Not even the app from OP‘s post.

          You should put down your tinfoil hat.

          • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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            5 hours ago

            Ehh?? How would that app know about the data the store potentially collects?

            The app database and store database are separate, both containing duplicate data on the receipt or any affiliate data sharing that can facilitate de-anomyzation.

            What? No one is doing that. Why would they? What if you have bluetooth disabled all the time like me because you don’t have any Bluetooth accessories, or to save power, or because Bluetooth is insecure.

            A lot of retail -even my doctor office - do use this and have for a while.

            BLE customer monitoring is certainly a thing. Here is an article from 2014: https://www.retail-innovation.com/carrefour-track-customer-journey-around-store-using-ble/

            Here is a more modern ad-riddled writeup. https://www.encstore.com/blog/5162-a-step-by-step-guide-to-using-ble-beacons-in-retail

            There is even a data broker claiming it records and updates your advertising profile before you get to the register. I wish I bookmarked that page when I read it years ago.

            Disabling Bluetooth, I suspect, would stop tracking. Note some modern phones still respond to Bluetooth and tracking when powered off, such as the Pixel, unless Bluetooth is disabled before shutdown.

            ??? The camera is just to check on the customers if they are scanning everything properly and not stealing. A human is reviewing the footage.

            Basic cameras can do that, but companies like Walmart and Home Depot have more advanced systems. Walmart profiles customers and can identify and alert staff/police to repeat problem customers. Home Depot has a class action case claiming it uses face detection technology. Heck, my cheap-ola off-the-shelf home security camera can track people and license plates straight out of the box. The Flock cameras tracking people and vehicles all over the cities use an OS released in 2017. This tech is prevalent now.

    • PiraHxCx@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      No, I didn’t let him take the picture and send it to who knows who :P

      He also wanted me to sign up because he would get a referral bonus, but I’m good.

    • icelimit@lemmy.ml
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      32 minutes ago

      I see a counter scam - it should be much easier to forge a receipt. Automate and profit.

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    My wife uses Fetch. Does a lot of this. She scans all our receipts but also receipts she finds. She’s gotten gift cards from it. I don’t trust it though.

    • PiraHxCx@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      I’m picturing people dumpster diving just to find receipts to scan. I didn’t know this was a thing… hell, I always destroy my personal info on mail packages, gonna start destroying receipts as well.

      • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        I’ve often wondered if typical retail receipts contain any sensitive info which would give me reason to shred them before discarding but the worst thing on there is last four digits of whichever card I used, and the merchant address, date/time, what I bought, but nothing directly tying it to ME unless some weirdo wants to figure out how to correlate people with last 4 of card numbers, but how inanely ridiculous that would be…yet here we are apparently 🤦🏼‍♀️

      • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        23 hours ago

        They don’t need to go dumpster diving. People leave plenty of receipts in self checkout printers or on the ground in the parking lot.

        The only catch to that is, Fetch started getting wind of people doing that, so it might tell you that you have so much time to scan the barcode of one of the products included, or the entire receipt will be invalidated. If you just bought it, you would have it handy (so, best to scan the receipt as you unload the groceries, at home). If you found the receipt in the store, you might be able to find the merchandise in time, like a little one-shot game of Supermarket Sweep. But if you found it outside the store… your chances go down a bit. And, I think, if you have too many receipts invalidated, they might just brand you a cheater and kick you off the program. But I’m not really sure.

  • shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    That sounds like super sketch, bro. I can’t believe normies are into that kind of shit. Okay, well actually I can, but it just makes me a little sad. 😭

  • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    I was bored so I looked up these apps for receipt scanning and it looks like it’s a combination of couponing and consumer data broker. Most of them require you to activate promos on the app first, go shopping, then get “cash back” for certain promo items when you take a picture of the receipt.

    I’m guessing this is on top of the discounts you can get directly from grocery store apps (which are surely already brokering purchase data).

    One or two of the apps don’t require activating offers at all so I guess those ones are JUST data brokering.

    • HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz
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      23 hours ago

      Another interesting one I’ve seen: Upside.

      It isn’t necessarily encouraging to buy a specific product, but rather to buy from specific businesses.

      To the consumer: they look at the app and buy gas from participating stores, which typically show as having a 5-10 cent discount on gas. The customer uploads a picture of their receipt to confirm the purchase and amount, and get credited that discount. Theres a monthly purvhase target that unlocks a 1 time discount of 30 cents per gallon, etc.

      To the business: they pay a fee to Upside to be a participant. Upside promises to only participate with a certain % of stores in the area. It’s likely the business also pays for some of the discounts obtained.

      Essentially paying upside is meant to increase sales volume. While a gas station could just dicount their gas, they are paying Upaide to effectively advertise and steer consumers to THAT store. As Upside is national, many custpmers use it, even in unfamiliar areas to choose gas stations.

      I say not a specific product, because my understanding is it’s extended to other business categories besides gas.

      Market manipulation, ultimately. I’m sure in some part they are sellong your location & purchase data as well.